history of
the book:
The history of the book is the story of a suite of technological
innovations that improved the quality of text conservation, the
access to information, portability, and the cost of production.
This history is strongly linked to political and economical contingencies
and the history of ideas and religions.
Writing is a system of linguistic symbols which permit one to transmit
and conserve information. Writing appears to have developed between
the 7th millennium BC and the 4th millennium BC, first in the form
of early mnemonic symbols which became a system of ideograms or
pictographs through simplification. The oldest known forms of writing
were thus primarily logographic in nature. Later syllabic and alphabetic
(or segmental) writing emerged.
Silk, in China, was also a base for writing. Writing was done with
brushes. Many other materials were used as bases: bone, bronze,
pottery, shell, etc. In India, for example, dried palm tree leaves
were used; in Mesoamerica another type of plant,Amate . Any material
which will hold and transmit text is a candidate for books. Given
this, the human body could be seen as a book, with tattooing, and
if we consider that human memory develops and transforms with the
appearance of writing, it is perhaps not absurd to consider that
this ability makes humans into living books (this idea is illustrated
by Ray Bradbury in Fahrenheit 451, Peter Greenaway in The Pillow
Book).
The book is also linked to the desire of humans to create lasting
records. Stones could be the most ancient form of writing, but wood
would be the first medium to take the guise of a book. The words
biblos and liber first meant "fibre inside of a tree".
In Chinese, the character that means book is an image of a tablet
of bamboo. Wood tablets have also been found on Easter Island. |